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Federico Bartolini

Biography
1861 - 1908

About the artist

Federico Bartolini (1861–1908) was an Italian painter best known for his detailed watercolors of realistic and orientalist themes. He trained at the Accademia di San Luca in Rome and developed a distinctive style in the 1880s, characterized by precision, refined use of color, and a predilection for exotic scenes.

His oeuvre included portraits of Italian peasants as well as lively scenes from North Africa and the Middle East. Typical of his work are watercolors of market traders, mosque visitors, and colorful street scenes full of textiles, ceramics, and architectural details. Despite the often fantasized nature of orientalist art, Bartolini succeeded in conveying a sense of authenticity and intimacy.

His work was exhibited in cities such as Brussels and Rome and attracted the attention of collectors internationally. He enjoyed a certain reputation in his time, but it was only after his death that his oeuvre received wider appreciation. Today his works are highly regarded for their historical value, craftsmanship and the way they visually bridge the Italian countryside with the distant world of Orientalism.

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